How to Integrate Influencer and Emotional Marketing to Improve Your Content Program
As marketers in the Age of Digital, we
are moving at the speed of digital without the chance to assess patterns and
think deeply about our work. Meanwhile, consumers' devices are constantly
bombarded with marketing clutter and meaningless ads that don't take the time
to understand consumers' needs or preferences.
As it always has, success
as marketers stems from using emotional marketing to
focus on consumers' needs and preferences in order to capitalize in our
markets. However, although emotional marketing is a powerful approach, it
cannot stand alone; it needs to be integrated within marketing channels and
tactics.
With the emergence of influencer
marketing as an important trend, part of the job as
marketers in 2019 is to pair emotional marketing with influencer marketing so
that we can better target and reach our desired audiences.
Let's review how you
can integrate emotional and influencer marketing into your content
marketing program this year and beyond.
What is emotional marketing?
Emotional marketing is
an method that's driven by your target audiences' feelings and values. It
involves connecting with your audience through a captivating story that aligns
with their beliefs. Those connections are critical, considering that emotional
responses influence intention to buy much more than the ad's content itself, research
shows.
But what does
emotional marketing entail?
It starts with
defining values that your brand was established upon and using those principles
to make connections with your customers.
Whether
you're looking to play up industry trends, target a specific demographic,
or mention the latest social or political movements in your messaging, find
something that resonates with the people you'd like to reach.
Don't
get too personal, but do understand how they feel.
Across the customer journey,
each stage reflects a different stage of emotion. Here are a few considerations
to keep in mind:
- Evaluation of your
product/service. Emotionally, they're still not
sold on your brand quite yet. How can you get them emotionally involved at
this stage of consideration? Here are three tips:
1. Employee advocacy. Getting customers on board starts internally: Nobody knows your brand better than the people who live and breathe it every day. Let your employees be part of the potential customer's evaluation process.
2. Demos. The proof is in the pudding. Nothing speaks to the quality of your product or service better than a demonstration, and this is the perfect time to respond any questions or concerns.
3. Influencers. Hearing validation from someone with influence has a powerful psychological effect. We'll dive deeper into influencers later on.
- Purchase. In this stage, customers
are feeling good about their choice—but not great (yet). They might have
some anxiety about the commitment or feel that risk is associated with the
product. Make them feel confident that they made the right decision and
ensure you're their trusted brand for life.
- Decided not to purchase. In this stage, they
either delayed or went another route. Emotionally, they may be on the
fence or have another vendor on a short list. Stay connected, remain
positive, and outline your brand's unique selling proposition.
- Loyalty/advocacy. Keep them active and
excited about the brand. Building loyal advocates who rave about your
brand will produce a positive return on investment: 92% of consumers
believe recommendations from friends and family over all forms of
advertising, research from Nielsen finds.
Emotional
marketing helps you become their friend, their confidant, their go-to brand.
Most important, your efforts should be geared toward being memorable.
Leverage influencers
But
how can you make sure your brand is the one everyone's talking about in today's
competitive environment? Here's where influencer marketing comes into
play.
According
to influencer marketing expert Linqia, 86% of marketers reported
using influencer marketing in 2017, and 92% of those respondents said it was
effective.
Using
influencers to represent your brand allows you to take a more personal approach
to engaging with your customers—especially if your personas line up with the
influencer's intent and interests.
For
example, what industry events are you planning to attend in 2019? Have you
considered investigating which influencers will be there, or what they'll be
discussing? Events are the perfect opportunity to make connections with
influencers. To get your foot in the door, find a way to relate your brand's
current services or initiatives with those influencers' passions.
Once
you've successfully connected with those influencers and they've endorsed your
product or service, your brand is positioned to build emotional connections
with customers. Your next step is to humanize your brand through interactions
with those influencers across channels.
Content
is a wonderful asset for ensuring your influencer relationships are influencing
the behavior of your audience: Q&As, blog posts, roundtables,
webinars—whether demand gen activities or earned media efforts—these valuable
connections should be leveraged across channels that drive intent.
Incorporate emotional
and influencer marketing into your content program
Creating
emotional connections involves aligning your influencer marketing efforts with
your content marketing program. Nothing will hit home for your customers more
than a piece of content that brings your brand down to earth. That process can
start at a basic level: having a conversation. Initiating conversations with
your influencers will automatically familiarize their followers with your
brand—increasing your reach and expanding awareness in a seemingly natural
fashion.
From
there, learn to fully integrate those influencers into your content program.
The following four tactics will help you do that:
- Events and webinars. Use influencers to bring
brand awareness via demand gen activities. This type of content is rich
with potential and can help you target your ideal prospects.
- Twitter chat. This is the most direct
way to have a conversation with your influencers and showcase your thought
leadership on a topic. It is also a great way to engage members of your
audience who may be listening in. And, who knows, you may pick up a batch
of new followers along the way.
- Guest blog series. (Emphasis on
"series.") The more your influencers are associated with your
brand, the more their followers will become emotionally invested. To
prove consistency and authenticity, challenge your influencers to commit
to a blog series rather than a one-off piece of content. (Bonus: A paid
influencer strategy is much cheaper when you pay by the
"bundle"—in case you weren't already sold on the series idea.)
- Live video/podcast. Nothing says "I
believe in your brand" more than publishing live conversations with
your influencers on your social channels. Plus, according to research, social
videos generate 1,200% more shares than text and images combined. Sounds
like a no-brainer.
Learning
how to seamlessly combine emotional and influencer marketing will be
challenging, but the rewards will be invaluable. Both techniques will become
incredible resources for starting conversations with your customers and create
a sense of brand validation that can't be found anywhere else.
Figuring
out the pattern of your customers and emotionally connecting with them at
specific stages of the journey will be the most difficult task to conquer. It
comes with a commitment to truly understanding your buyers, personalizing the
experience, and taking the time to nurture the relationship every step of the
way. Advocacy doesn't happen overnight—it takes years to establish.
So,
are you ready to emotionally invest in your marketing efforts?
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